: Edith Nesbit
: The Wouldbegoods
: Seltzer Books
: 9781455372034
: 1
: CHF 0.10
:
: Kinder- und Jugendbücher
: English
: 789
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
Novel for children. According to Wikipedia: 'Edith Nesbit (married name Edith Bland; 15 August 1858 - 4 May 1924) was an English author and poet whose children's works were published under the name of E. Nesbit. She wrote or collaborated on over 60 books of fiction for children, several of which have been adapted for film and television. She was also a political activist and co-founded the Fabian Society, a precursor to the modern Labour Party.... Nesbit published approximately 40 books for children, both novels and collections of stories. Collaborating with others, she published almost as many more. According to her biographer Julia Briggs, Nesbit was 'the first modern writer for children': '(Nesbit) helped to reverse the great tradition of children's literature inaugurated by [Lewis] Carroll, [George] MacDonald and Kenneth Grahame, in turning away from their secondary worlds to the tough truths to be won from encounters with things-as-they-are, previously the province of adult novels.' Briggs also credits Nesbit with having invented the children's adventure story. Among Nesbit's best-known books are The Story of the Treasure Seekers (1898) and The Wouldbegoods (1899), which both recount stories about the Bastables, a middle class family that has fallen on relatively hard times. Her children's writing also included numerous plays and collections of verse. She created an innovative body of work that combined realistic, contemporary children in real-world settings with magical objects and adventures and sometimes travel to fantastic worlds.'

 CHAPTER 7 BEING BEAVERS; OR, THE YOUNG EXPLORERS (ARCTIC OR OTHERWISE)


 

You read in books about the pleasures of London, and about how people who live in the country long for the gay whirl of fashion in town because the country is so dull.  I do not agree with this at all.  In London, or at any rate Lewisham, nothing happens unless you make it happen; or if it happens it doesn't happen to you, and you don't know the people it does happen to.  But in the country the most interesting events occur quite freely, and they seem to happen to you as much as to anyone else.  Very often quite without your doing anything to help.

 

The natural and right ways of earning your living in the country are much jollier than town ones, too; sowing and reaping, and doing things with animals, are much better sport than fishmongering or bakering or oil-shopping, and those sort of things, except, of course, a plumber's and gasfitter's, and he is the same in town or country--most interesting and like an engineer.

 

I remember what a nice man it was that came to cut the gas off once at our old house in Lewisham, when my father's business was feeling so poorly.  He was a true gentleman, and gave Oswald and Dicky over two yards and a quarter of good lead piping, and a brass tap that only wanted a washer, and a whole handful of screws to do what we liked with.  We screwed the back door up with the screws, I remember, one night when Eliza was out without leave.  There was an awful row.  We did not mean to get her into trouble.  We only thought it would be amusing for her to find the door screwed up when she came down to take in the milk in the morning.  But I must not say any more about the Lewisham house.  It is only the pleasures of memory, and nothing to do with being beavers, or any sort of exploring.

 

I think Dora and Daisy are the kind of girls who will grow up very good, and perhaps marry missionaries.  I am glad Oswald's destiny looks at present as if it might be different.

 

We made two expeditions to discover the source of the Nile (or the North Pole), and owing to their habit of sticking together and doing dull and praiseable things, like sewing, and helping with the cooking, and taking invalid delicacies to the poor and indignant, Daisy and Dora were wholly out of it both times, though Dora's foot was now quite well enough to have gone to the North Pole or the Equator either.  They said they did not mind the first time, because they like to keep themselves clean; it is another of their queer ways.  And they said they had had a better time than us.  (It was only a clergyman and his wife who called, and hot cakes for tea.) The second time they said they were lucky not to have been in it.  And perhaps they were right.  But let me to my narrating.  I hope you will like it.  I am going to try to write it a different way, like the books they give you for a prize at a girls' school--I mean a 'young ladies' school', of course--not a high school.  High schools are not nearly so silly as some other kinds.  Here goes:

 

'"Ah, me!" sighed a slender maiden of twelve summers, removing her elegant hat and passing her tapery fingers lightly through her fair tresses,"how sad it is--is it not?--to see able-bodied youths and young ladies wasting the precious summer hours in idleness and luxury."

 

'The maiden frowned reproachingly, but yet with earnest gentleness, at the group of youths and maidens